ciueli wrote:You were claiming having Ingram wasn't going to reduce minutes for players like Ochai, Gradey, and Ja'Kobe (plus whoever we draft if he's a swing), the logical assumption is you see him playing minutes at the 4. What's the alternative, play him as a PG or C? Maybe you're right and Ingram won't reduce minutes for our young swings because he'll be injured all the time but that's an even worse outcome, right?
I see him primarily playing SF minutes. I don't see a reason he needs to shift positions much, especially to the guard slots.
But we don't have a lot of talent at the 3 that I really care about right now, and Scottie can and does play the 4, so he can shuffle over more regularly to accommodate Ingram easily enough.
Brandon Ingram has zero seasons with a positive RAPTOR defence value, zero seasons with a positive defensive Box +/-. He's not incredible at rebounding, shot blocking, or steals, his defensive rating numbers don't stand out. I don't see numbers to indicate he's a good defender, that's what I'm going by. Do you have stats or information that indicate the opposite?
"Good," "Bad" and "Not Good" are all distinct qualifiers. He doesn't need to stand out, he just needs to not be a problem. Which he won't be.
The precedent in his career is disappointment. If that's what you're relying on to predict what will happen next season prepare to be disappointed.
This is an empty statement. I was looking at years of him shooting the 3 quite well when I was looking at his previous seasons. Minging about "precedent in his career is disappointment" is irrelevant to clear proof of his ability to float 3pt volume with efficiency.
I mean, you're the one who started it, right? I posted what I thought was a pretty straightforward unbiased take on the reasons we shouldn't have done the Ingram deal and then you picked it apart with one piece where you jumped all over me saying I couldn't be more wrong if I tried. Now you're calling me hostile?
No. There was nothing hostile in my reply. You were very much incorrect about Ingram's 3pt shooting, and I noted that. It isn't hostile to note inaccuracy.
It's a bad fit, I've explained this many times. Being better at getting to the FT line is something we could do as a team to get better, another example of what Ingram doesn't do to help us. You're too focused on looking at players in a vacuum instead of team construction as a whole, we need players who do different things and fill different roles, we don't have that right now.
The utility of getting to the line is mostly about efficiency. You can comment about putting the opposition in foul trouble, but that'll be of variable impact on any given night. If you don't have foul draw but you have superior shooting ability, it evens out at worst. And we'll still have RJ, and the bigs. And Quick is pretty decent about it, even though he isn't terribly efficient either.
You speak of me considering players in a vacuum, but you have to address the value of the trait you're expressing. If Ingram's league-average or better in efficiency, we are already ahead of the game based on how that will affect our team offense. And the spacing he provides will help the other guys on the team to a considerable degree as well. There are multiple paths to the end destination.
It probably won't matter because we're going to play Ingram and win a bunch of games to end out the season, yet another reason we shouldn't have done the Ingram deal, but whatever, right?
We might. We might not. We shall see.
No we won't, we'll be good enough to either just miss the play-in or make it, then wind up drafting outside the top 10. We can't even tank properly this season when we had a ton of injuries early on and a bottom 2 record for a while, you think we're going to tank in a season where Masai and Bobby are fighting for a new contract?
I didn't mean intentionally tank, I meant we'd be bad enough to get another semi-decent pick to work with. Frankly, I think with 60+ games of Ingram and what that will do for the rest of the squad offensively, we'll be better than you expect. But that remains to be seen, certainly.